Showing posts with label Resurrection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Resurrection. Show all posts

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Mary

A Poem by
Joyce MacBeth Morehouse

She came quickly to the Garden
In the dew of early morn;
Hurrying to where they laid Him,
She knelt down to view His form.
But alas! Her Lord was missing!
And these angels? Who are they?
They stood guard in silent witness,
But the stone was rolled away.

As she stood there, weeping, stricken,
Wondering if this gardener knew.
Surely He could help her find Him;
Tell her what she ought to do;
"Can you tell me where they laid Him?
For they took my Lord, it seems."
All her hopes collapsed around her -
Broken heart and broken dreams.

As He eyed her with compassion,
Gazing in her face of fear,
His "Mary" came so gently
That was all she had to hear;
Reaching out in exultation,
Tears of joy,not sorrow, came,
For the tomb was truly empty -
Life would never be the same.



Editor's Note: Sis. Joyce is q licensed minister with the UPCI, living in Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada - where she attends the United Pentecostal Church, (Pastor Russell H. Morehouse). Her friend, Norma Brewer, (London, Ontario) recommended Sis. Joyce to us, and spoke highly of her writing ministry. This is the first time we've presented her to our readers and are looking forward to more good things! This poem is copyrighted. Used by permission.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Sit On It!

By Pastor Ken Foreman

Text: Matthew 28:1-8

The women came to the sepulchre in sorrow, wondering who would roll away the stone so they could care for the body of Jesus...

But, before they arrived, the angel of the Lord descended. He rolled away the stone and then sat on it - waiting for the women to arrive. When they got there, he had words of comfort for them...
  • Fear not!
  • You seek Jesus - who was crucified
  • He is not here
  • He is risen as He said
  • Come, see the place where the Lord lay
  • Go, quickly, and tell His disciples...
    • that He is risen from the dead
    • behold, He goeth into Galilee before you
    • there ye shall see Him
  • Lo! I have told you!
It is interesting to note that what the women thought of as a problem, (rolling away the stone,) the angel was powerful enough to not only take care of it, (do the work,) but also to sit on the problem in victory!

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Two Laws of Revival

By Tes Stewart

Text: Ezekiel 37:1-10

The devil is already defeated - there's nothing he can do to change that fact. Still, there is a great need for personal revival.

David said, "Though I walk in the midst of trouble, Thou wilt revive me." His personal testimony confirms this. He knew what he was talking about; otherwise, it would have been David, the adulterer... David, the murderer.

Samson had greater victory after personal failure than in all the time before.

Jonah, the runaway preacher, had the greatest revival on the other side of his personal failure.

Corporate revival is well and good and needed. But corporate revival is built on individual, personal revival.

We're in a battle, a spiritual war! The entire spirit man may be killed. Other things can also be killed in battle; joy, peace, confidence, passion, enthusiasm, burden, love, etc.

God breathes new life into every area of your life. If you lose your peace in battle, you can pray until your peace is restored. Like a starfish, you can regrow what the enemy has destroyed. "I am the LORD that healeth thee!"

God showed Ezekiel how bad it was - a valley full of dry bones, and they were very dry! He asked Ezekiel, "Can these bones live?" 
  • Law #1 - If it lived once, it can live again!
    • It doesn't matter how dead, dry, withered, or how long dead...
    • For the widow of Nain - Jesus said, "Stop the funeral!"
    • Lazarus - dead for three days, "stinketh" - they had given up and entertained Jesus where they were (in the house)
    • Jesus said, "Take Me to where Lazarus is."
    • Remember - "The promises of God are yea and amen!"
    • We need audacious faith - God said...!
    • Speak to the bones!
    • Miracles: the bones came together
    • Bone to his bone...
    • sinews and muscles cover the bones...
    • skin covers the whole
    • Still no breath! - just a body back together again but no life
    • New command - "Speak to the wind!"
  • Law #2 - It's not revival til it lives again!
    • Too often we settle for the "miracles" when we desperately need "New Life!"
    • Go back to your first love - if you were a Sunday School teacher before, you can be a Sunday School teacher again.
Those bones went into that valley as an exceeding great army. In the valley they lost their life. They came out of the valley an exceeding great army.

In true revival, God restores everything. They came out with everything restored - plus a testimony!
That revived soldier was a testimony - a living epistle!

Settling for the miracles without the life being restored makes for a lifeless cycle. The miracle is subject to decay and will revert to being dry bones again.

Ezekiel was told to prophesy to the wind. It came and brought life to the dead bones waiting there in the valley. On the Day of Pentecost, that wind blew again, bringing life to waiting hearts and birthing the church. We need that revival wind to blow again today. These dry, dead bones need the life giving power of the Holy Ghost to raise us to live in His sight and to fulfill His purpose in and for us.

Editor's Note: Tes Stewart is the son of Bro. & Sis. Albert Stewart, UPCI missionaries to Liberia, Africa. Currently serving as an evangelist, based in Houston, Texas, these are sermon notes from a message preached here at New Life recently. His ministry was a blessing to us all. Many souls filled the altars and one made her decision to be baptized in Jesus' Name!

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

The Hold, the Hole, and the Whole

By Betty D. Austin

As I was on hold during a call to 36th District Court, the strangest thoughts began coming to me about the word hold.  It is a word whose pronunciation is similar to a few other words in the English language. For instance, this is what began running through my mind: hold – hole – whole. So, I started jotting down – as I was on hold – hold, hole, and whole! Then I proceeded to write this article, "The Hold, the Hole, and the Whole."

I thought about the meaning of each of these words, my phrases, and their spiritual portent. A hold is definitely a place where something is held fast, something or someone that constrains a person or object. There is a force that has definitely laid hold of us but at the same time, we have a hold on Someone who also has a hold on us – on our heart! That Someone is Jesus Christ, the One who has all power in heaven and earth.

Matthew 28:18 - "And Jesus came and spake unto them, saying, All power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth."

This opposing and evil force has definitely laid hold of us, thinking to place us in a hole.

Psalm 18:4-5 - "The sorrows of death compassed me, and the floods of ungodly men made me afraid. The sorrows of hell compassed me about: the snares of death prevented me."

Psalms 40:2-3 - "He brought me up also out of an horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings. And He hath put a new song in my mouth, even praise unto our God: many shall see it, and fear, and shall trust in the LORD."

The word pit can be another word for hole. The pit can be the grave from which it was believed there was no deliverance or escape. It was a place of no return! This thought is reiterated by Job. However, Jesus proved that belief to be wrong!

Job 16:22 - "When a few years are come, then I shall go the way whence I shall not return."

Job 17:14-16 - "I have said to corruption, Thou art my father: to the worm, Thou art my mother, and my sister. And where is now my hope? as for my hope, who shall see it? They shall go down to the bars of the pit, when our rest together is in the dust." 

When that force lays hold of us and places us in a hole, it is in truth another challenge to the validity of the power of the One who has already allowed Himself to be placed in a hole but came forth from that hole victorious and completely wholeholding all power in heaven and in earth. 

The One who came out of the hole lives in us, has hold of us. We must hold fast to Him even when in a hole and remember He will not let go of His hold on us. If we do, He shall free us of the hold of the evil one and bring us out of the hole, free and completely whole.

Isaiah 41:10-13 - "Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of My righteousness.  Behold, all they that were incensed against thee shall be ashamed and confounded: they shall be as nothing; and they that strive with thee shall perish. Thou shalt seek them, and shalt not find them, even them that contended with thee: they that war against thee shall be as nothing, and as a thing of nought. For I the LORD thy God will hold thy right hand, saying unto thee, Fear not; I will help thee."

Hebrews 10:23 - "Let us hold fast the profession of our faith without wavering; (for He is faithful that promised;)" 

It is a marvelous and amazing Truth that The One – Jesus Christ – who submitted to the hold to be placed in a hole came forth whole. He now does His greatest work in holes!

"Oh, Jesus, we do not have to climb up to heaven to bring Thee down, for Thou art here. If I'm in a hole, Thou art in the hole with me - to release me. All I need to do is to stop turning my back on Thee. Thou art here. Amen."
Afffirmation for the Day: "In view of the Here-ness of Jesus, I am not alone and I am not without Resources." [These two quotes taken from "The Word Made Flesh" by E. Stanley Jones]


Editor's Note: Betty Austin is the mother of Laurel Williams. (See "Covered" in this issue.) Betty and her husband, Charles R. Austin, attend The Apostolic church (Pastor Steve Warman) in Auburn Hills, Michigan. There, she teaches the women's class in rotation and conducts one on one Bible studies in her home.


Friday, April 6, 2012

Calvary Week & the Seven Feasts

Editorial
By Marjorie Kinnee

Text:  Leviticus 23
Luke 16:16 - "The law and the prophets were until John: since that time the Kingdom of Heaven is preached, and every man presseth into it."
Luke 26:44 - "And He said unto them, These are the words which I spake unto you, while I was yet with you, that all things must be fulfilled, which were written in the law of Moses, and in the prophets, and in the Psalms concerning Me." 

Over the last few days, a link I've never noticed before has been illuminated. That Calvary week occurred during the Jews Passover and feast of unleavened bread is well documented. That this was intentional is also clear. I recently learned that Jewish rabbis teach that their calendar is not merely linear, it is also cyclical; meaning significant events occur again and again on the same date throughout their history. Students of Bible prophecy will find this concept fascinating. Let's explore all seven feasts and some interesting correlations...

Passover [Pesach] - a one or two-day feast, (one day in Israel, two days everywhere else,) which commemorates the night when the death angel passed over the homes of the children of Israel. The key to their safety lay in obedience to God's command - a spotless lamb, killed, and its blood sprinkled (using a hyssop branch) on the lentel and doorposts of each home. This obedience spared the life of every first born taking refuge in a blood-marked home. Into every home, Egyptian or otherwise, (from the Pharaoh himself down to the lowest slave and the animals,) that did not have the blood of the spotless lamb in place, the death angel entered and the life of the firstborn in that dwelling was forfeited. During the seder, the Jews also rehearse the events leading up to the Passover; the patriarchs, their sojourn in Egypt, slavery, Moses' birth and deliverance, his call and confrontations with Pharaoh, the ten plagues, and on through to the parting of the Red Sea. Through the Haggadah (readings) they re-visit their deliverance year after year, always leaving an empty chair for Elijah, (the one who is to come and prepare the way of the Lord,) and always ending with, "Next year in Jerusalem!" Today, we understand the relationship between Passover and its fulfillment at Calvary as a cornerstone of our present faith.

Unleavened Bread - occurs in tandem with Passover because it is a memorial of the meal eaten in haste as they prepared to leave Egypt behind; it lasts seven days. To this day, Jews eat the Passover Seder; consisting of unleavened bread, wine, roasted lamb, along with vegetables and bitter herbs, (each having its own significance,) in remembrance of their deliverance from Egyptian bondage. Prior to Unleavened Bread, they undertake an extensive cleansing of their homes, vehicles, clothing, accessories, etc., to eliminate every trace of leaven. The rabbis teach this purging of old leaven, which in itself takes many days to complete, is symbolic of repentance. Note: Both John the Baptist ("Prepare ye the way of the LORD!") and Jesus preached repentance. Moreover, when Jesus sent His disciples out two by two, He told them to preach repentance. Finally, The Last Supper was not only a celebration of Passover and Unleavened Bread, it was also its fulfillment! There -  Jesus instituted the concept of a new testament/covenant, one that extended into the immediate future and would find its fulfillment when we all celebrate it in the Kingdom of God. (See Matthew 26:28-29.) What we now call the communion service, which includes the essential elements of both Passover and Unleavened Bread, was rooted in what was and would grow a veritable mountain, in which the knowledge of the LORD, who He is and what He came to do would fill all the earth - and heaven too! Of this supper, Jesus said, "This do in remembrance of Me."  [Side note: Jesus first washed His disciples' feet, including Judas Iscariot, and the at first unwilling Peter, then shared communion with them, still including Judas. It was at this point that Judas went out into the night to meet with the chief priests and their guards. Jesus went on to Gethsemane, where He prayed, submitted, was betrayed, arrested, abandoned by all, and then thrust into an all-night trial and the agony that followed.]

First Fruits - Leviticaus 23 lists the seven feasts and places "First Fruits" on "the morrow after the Sabbath" (Sunday). This feast, although not celebrated until they came into the Promised Land, was also part of Passover week, because the fifty-day countdown to Pentecost [Shavuot] began on that same day. (See I Corinthians 15:20-23.) At some point the Jews began combining "First Fruits" with "Pentecost" and they celebrate the two together at the present time. Either way, whether you count Jesus as the first fruits of the resurrection, or whether you count Pentecost as the first fruits of His harvest - the feast of first fruits plays an important part in God's design, plan, and purpose.

Pentecost [Shavuot] - Shavuot literally means weeks. It comes seven Sabbaths (also referred to as "the counting of the omer,") after the Feast of Unleavened Bread is complete. Shavuot commemorates the giving of the law at Mount Sinai. Pentecost is a Greek word meaning fifty. Present day Judaism does not recognize the relationship between Shavuot and the Day of Pentecost, but a comparison of Deuteronomy 29:10-15 and Acts 2:38-39 should help clarify the relationship between the old and the new covenant/testaments. (See also Deuteronomy 29:29; and Ezekiel 11:19; 18:31; 36:26.) Jesus coined the phrase "new testament" (Luke 22:20) while the writer to the Hebrews (in Hebrews 8-9,) explains how the "old" passes away when the "new" (better) comes. After His death and resurrection, (on the first day of the week, as the "first" fulfillment of the concept of "first-fruits,") Jesus showed Himself alive with many infallible proofs for forty days, then, as He ascended into heaven, the disciples watched in amazement. Ten days later, "when the Day of Pentecost was fully come," while Jews from every nation were assembled in Jerusalem, the Holy Ghost was poured out, the old passed away, the new covenant was initiated, and the world took note that this was the inauguration of true, life-changing transformation.

Trumpets [Rosh Hashanah] - the feast of trumpets actually marks the beginning of the Jewish calendar. It celebrates the sixth day, when man was created. Everything prior to the sixth day was in preparation for God's holy purpose, man. The rabbis teach Rosh Hashanah comes for two reasons; 1.) to crown God as King, and, 2.) to remind us that creation was not accidental. God had a purpose in mind. We are here for a reason - to fill the earth with the knowledge of God. The shofars (trumpets) call us to think seriously. The Day of Atonement is coming when the deeds of men will be judged. The ten days between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur allow man to consider his ways, repent, ask forgiveness, make restitution where possible, and prepare to stand before God's judgment seat. It's interesting to note that there was a period of ten days between Jesus' ascension and the outpouring of the Holy Ghost on the Day of Pentecost, during which the disciples and Mary, Jesus' mother, were among the 120 gathered in the upper room waiting/tarrying for the promise of the Father (See Acts 1:4-5; 12-14; 2:1-4.) Look how the knowledge of the Lord filled the earth following that glorious outpouring!

Day of Atonement [Yom Kippur] - Under the Old Testament sacrificial system, sins were dealt with year by year. Atonement could be accurately described as at-one-ment. Acknowledging sin, recognizing that God's way was the only right way, and coming into agreement with God and His commandments concerning sin was key. Two goats were selected; one to be sacrificed immediately, the other to bear the blood of the first goat and thereby, the sins of the people outside the camp into the wilderness, where he too perished. Sins covered by repentance were rolled forward to the next Day of Atonement, sins not repented of were not forgiven and cut one off from fellowship with God. Compare the Day of Atonement with Romans 14:10-12; I Corinthians 3:11-17; and, II Corinthians 5:10-11. (See also Revelation 20:11-15.)

Tabernacles [Succot] - Also called the feast of booths, is celebrated by fashioning a crude booth out of boards or reeds and "camping out" in it for eight days. The rabbis teach that it is celebrated during the fall of the year (as opposed to sequentially after Shavuot,) as a reminder that God's purpose prevails in good times (spring, when all is fresh and new,) and not so good times (fall, when the weather is changeable and often rainy, chilly, and uncomfortable,) in the understanding that God wants to "tabernacle" with men in every kind of situation. During this feast, Jews remember the wilderness sojourn of their forefathers, meditate on what went wrong back then, and look forward to the promised day when the knowledge of the Lord shall truly fill all the earth. (See Isaiah 11:1-9; 65:17-25; Habakkuk 2:14; and, Revelation 21:1-4.)


Monday, March 12, 2012

Sit On It!

By Pastor Ken Foreman

Text: Matthew 28:1-8
Key Verse: "And, behold, there was a great earthquake: for the angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came, and rolled back the stone from the door, and sat upon it." (Matthew 28:2)

The women came to the sepulchre in sorrow, wondering who would roll away the stone so they could care for the body of Jesus. They were prepared to do so, but, before they arrived, the angel of the Lord had already descended. Unknown to them, he had rolled away the stone and was now sitting on it, waiting for the women to arrive. Imagine their surprise when they came around a corner and saw the angel! But not only did they "see" an angel - he had words of comfort for them!
  • Fear not!
  • You seek Jesus...
    • who was crucified
  • He is not here!
  • He is risen as He said
  • Come, see the place where the Lord lay
  • Go quickly, and tell His disciples...
    • that He is risen from the dead, (and,)
    • behold, He goeth into Galilee before you;
    • there - ye shall see Him
  • Lo! I have told you!
It is interesting to note that what the women perceived as a problem, (rolling away the stone,) the angel was powerful enough to not only take care of it, (do the work,) but also to sit on the problem in Victory!